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Transcript
Teaching clinical communication:
a mainstream activity or just a
minority sport?
Jonathan Silverman
International Conference on Communication in Healthcare
Oslo 2008
UNIVERSITY OF
CAMBRIDGE
School of
Clinical Medicine
Plan
1.
Why does clinical communication often appear to be a
minority sport in medical education?
2.
How to overcome this: integrate, don’t separate
3. Five specific areas of integration
4.
A new UK consensus statement to help integrate
communication into the mainstream
5.
The progression to maturity in communication
curricula
UNIVERSITY OF
CAMBRIDGE
School of
Clinical Medicine
Premise 1
Medical education cannot ignore
the central importance of
Effective
clinical
communication
UNIVERSITY OF
CAMBRIDGE
to
High quality
healthcare
School of
Clinical Medicine
Premise 1
Clinical competence - the ability to integrate:
• knowledge
• communication
• physical examination
• problem-solving
UNIVERSITY OF
CAMBRIDGE
School of
Clinical Medicine
All slides with a white background are
additional slides to the original Oslo
presentation.
These slides provide selected research
evidence that augment the concepts
presented in Oslo
Are there problems in communication
between doctors and patients?
• reasons for the patient's attendance
• gathering information
• explanation and planning
• adherence to plans
• medico-legal
• lack of empathy and understanding
Kurtz, Silverman and Draper (2005; 2nd Ed)
Teaching and Learning Communication Skills in
Medicine
Radcliffe Medical Press
Silverman, Kurtz and Draper (2005; 2nd Ed)
Skills for Communicating with Patients
Radcliffe Medical Press
Discovering the reasons for the patient’s attendance

54% of patients’ complaints and 45% of their concerns are not elicited
(Stewart et al 1979)

in 50% of visits, the patient and the doctor do not agree on the nature of the
main presenting problem (Starfield et al 1981)

only a minority of health professionals identify more than 60% of their
patients' main concerns (Maguire et al 1996)

consultations with problem outcomes are frequently characterised by
unvoiced patient agenda items (Barry et al 2000)

doctors frequently interrupt patients so soon after they begin their opening
statement that patients fail to disclose significant concerns (Beckman and
Frankel 1984, Marvel et al 1999 )

doctors often interrupt patients after the initial concern, apparently
assuming that the first complaint is the chief one, yet the order in which
patients present their problems is not related to their clinical importance
(Beckman and Frankel 1984)
Gathering information


doctors often pursue a “doctor-centred”, closed approach to information gathering that discourages patients
from telling their story or voicing their concerns (Byrne and Long 1976)
both a “high control style” and premature focus on
medical problems can lead to an over-narrow approach
to hypothesis generation and to inaccurate
consultations (Platt and McMath 1979)

oncologists preferentially listen for and respond to certain disease cues over others – while pain amenable to
specialist cancer treatment is recognised, other pains are not acknowledged or are dismissed (Rogers and
Todd 2000)

doctors rarely ask their patients to volunteer their ideas
and in fact, doctors often evade their patients’ ideas
and inhibit their expression. Yet if discordance between
doctors’ and patients’ ideas and beliefs about the
illness remains unrecognised, poor understanding,
adherence, satisfaction and outcome are likely to ensue
(Tuckett et al 1985)

doctors only respond positively to patient cues in 38% of cases in surgery and 21% in primary care (Levinson
2000)
Explanation and planning

in general, physicians give sparse information to their patients, with most patients wanting their
doctors to provide more information than they do (Waitzkin 1984, Pinder 1990, Beisecker and
Beisecker 1990, Jenkins et al 2001, Richard and Lussier 2003)

doctors overestimate the time they devote to
explanation and planning in the consultation by up to
900% (Waitzkin 1984, Makoul et al 1995)

patients and doctors disagree over the relative importance of imparting different types of
medical information; patients place the highest value on information about prognosis,
diagnosis and causation of their condition while doctors overestimate their patient’s desire for
information concerning treatment and drug therapy (Kindelan and Kent 1987)

doctors consistently use jargon that patients do not understand (Svarstad 1974, Hadlow and
Pitts 1991)

there are significant problems with patients’ recall and understand of the information that
doctors impart (Tuckett et al 1985, Dunn et al (1993)

only the minority of patients achieve their preferred
level of control in decision making in cancer treatment
(Degner et al 1997)
Patient adherence

patients do not comply or adhere to the plans that
doctors make: on average 50% do not take their
medicine at all or take it incorrectly (Meichenbaum and Turk 1987,
Butler et al 1996)

non-compliance is enormously expensive. The cost of wasted funds spent
on prescription medications used inappropriately or not used in Canada
amounts to 5 billion a year, based on an annual expenditure of 10.3 billion
and data indicating that 50% of prescription medications are not used as
prescribed. Estimates of the further costs of non-adherence (including
extra visits to physicians, laboratory tests, additional medications,
hospital and nursing home admissions, lost productivity and premature
death) were CAN$ 7-9 billion in Canada (Coambs et al 1995) and US$billion
plus in the US (Berg et al 1993)
Medico-legal issues

breakdown in communication between patients and physicians is a critical factor leading to malpractice
litigation (Levinson 1994). Lawyers identified physicians’ communication and attitudes as the primary reason
for patients pursuing a malpractice suit in 70% of cases (Avery 1986).

Beckman et al (1994) showed that the following four communication problems were present in over 70% of
malpractice depositions: deserting the patient, devaluing patients’ views, delivering information poorly and
failing to understand patients’ perspectives.

Patients of obstetricians with a high frequency of
malpractice claims are more likely to complain of
feeling rushed and ignored and receiving inadequate
explanation, even by their patients who do not sue.
(Hickson et al 1994)

in several states of the USA, malpractice insurance companies award premium discounts of 3 to 10% annually
to their insured physicians who attend a communication skills workshop (Carroll 1996)
Lack of empathy and understanding

numerous reports of patient dissatisfaction with the doctor-patient
relationship appear in the media. Many articles comment on doctors’ lack
of understanding of the patient as a person with individual concerns and
wishes

there are significant problems in medical education in
the development of relationship building skills: it is not
correct to assume that doctors either have the ability to
communicate empathically with their patients or that
they will acquire this ability during their medical
training (Sanson-Fisher and Poole 1978, Suchman and Williamson 2003)
Premise 1
Research into clinical communication
• More effective interviews:
accuracy
efficiency
supportiveness
• Enhanced patient and health professional
satisfaction
• Improved health outcomes for patients
UNIVERSITY OF
CAMBRIDGE
School of
Clinical Medicine
Research evidence to validate the use of
specific communication skills:
• process of the interview
•
satisfaction
•
recall and understanding
•
adherence
•
outcome:
decreased patient concern
symptom resolution
physiological outcome
Process of the interview

the longer the doctor waits before interrupting at the beginning of the interview, the more likely she is to
discover the full spread of issues that the patient wants to discuss and the less likely will it be that new
complaints arise at the end of the interview (Beckman and Frankel 1984, Joos et al 1996, Marvel et al 1999,
Langewitz et al 2002)

the use of open rather than closed questions and the use of attentive listening leads to greater disclosure of
patients’ significant concerns (Cox 1989, Maguire et al 1996, Wissow et al 1994)

asking “what worries you about this problem” is not as effective a question as “what concerns you about this
problem” in discovering unrecognised concerns (Bass and Cohen 1982)

the more questions patients are allowed to ask of the doctor, the more information they obtain (Tuckett et al
1985)

picking up and responding to patient cues shortens
rather than lengthens visits (Levinson et al 2000)
Patient satisfaction






greater “patient centredness” in the interview leads to greater patient satisfaction (Stewart
1984, Arborelius and Bromberg 1992, Kinnersley et al 1999, Little et al 2001)
discovering and acknowledging patients’ expectations improves patient satisfaction (Korsch et
al 1968, Eisenthal and Lazare 1976, Eisenthal et al 1990, Bell et al 2001)
physician non-verbal communication (eye-contact, posture, nods, distance, communication of
emotion though face and voice) is positively related to patient satisfaction (DiMatteo et al 1986,
Weinberger et al 1981, Larsen and Smith 1981, Griffith et al 2003)
patient satisfaction is directly related to the amount of information that patients perceive they
have been given by their doctors (Hall et al 1988)
information giving, expression of affect, relationship building, empathy and higher patient
centeredness lead to increased patient satisfaction. (Williams S, Weinman et al 1998)
in cancer patients, satisfaction with the
consultation and the amount of information and
emotional support received are all significantly
greater in those who reported a shared role in
decision making (Gattellari et al 2001)
Patient recall and understanding

asking patients to repeat in their own words
what they understand of the information they
have just been given increases their retention
of that information by 30% (Bertakis 1977)

there is decreased understanding of information given if the patient’s and doctor’s explanatory
frameworks are at odds and if this is not discovered and addressed during the interview
(Tuckett et al 1985)

patient recall is increased by categorisation, signposting, summarising, repetition, clarity and
use of diagrams (Ley 1988)

the provision of audio or video tapes of the actual interview and writing to patients after their
consultation increase patient satisfaction, recall, understanding and patient activity (Tattersall
et al 1997, McConnell et al 1999, Sowden et al 2001, Scott et al 2001)
Adherence

patients who are viewed as partners, informed of treatment rationales and helped in understanding their
disease are more adherent to plans made (Schulman 1979)

doctors can increase adherence to treatment regimens by explicitly asking patients about knowledge, beliefs,
concerns and attitudes to their own illness (Inui et al 1976, Maiman et al 1988)

discovering patients’ expectations leads to greater patient adherence to plans made whether or not those
expectations are met by the doctor (Eisenthal and Lazare 1976, Eisenthal et al 1990)

consultations using a structured exploration of
patients' beliefs about their illness and medication and
specifically addressing understanding, acceptance,
level of personal control and motivation leads to
improved clinical control or medication use even three
months after the intervention ceased (Dowell et al 2002)
Outcome
Symptom resolution

resolution of symptoms of chronic headache is more
related to the patient’s feeling that they were able to
discuss their headache and problems fully at the initial
visit with their doctor than to diagnosis, investigation,
prescription or referral (The Headache Study Group 1986)

training doctors in problem-defining and emotion-handling skills not only leads to
improvements in the detection of psychosocial problems but also to a reduction in
patient’s emotional distress up to six months later (Roter et al 1995)
in the management of sore throat, satisfaction with the consultation and how well the
doctor deals with patient concerns predicts the duration of illness (Little et al 1997)
patient-centred communication is associated with better recovery from discomfort and
concern, better emotional health two months later and fewer diagnostic tests and referrals


(Stewart et al 2000)
Outcome
Physiological outcome

giving the patient the opportunity to discuss their health concerns rather than simply
answer closed questions leads to better control of hypertension (Orth et al 1987)

decreased need for analgesia after myocardial infarction is related to information giving
and discussion with the patient (Mumford et al 1982)

providing an atmosphere in which the patient can be involved in choices if they are
available leads to less anxiety and depression after breast cancer surgery (Fallowfield et
al 1990)

patients who are coached in asking questions of and
negotiating with their doctor not only obtain more
information but actually achieve better BP control in
hypertension and improved blood sugar control in
diabetes (Kaplan et al 1989, Rost et al 1991)
Premise 2
Communication skills can be taught and learnt
And we know which methods work
UNIVERSITY OF
CAMBRIDGE
School of
Clinical Medicine
Premise 2
Aspergren K (1999)
Teaching and Learning Communication Skills in Medicine:
a review with quality grading of articles
Medical Teacher 21 (6)
Smith S, Hanson J, Tewksbury L et al (2007)
Teaching Patient Communication Skills to Medical
Students: a review of randomised controlled trials
Evaluation and the Health Professions 30 (1)
UNIVERSITY OF
CAMBRIDGE
School of
Clinical Medicine
Aspergren K (1999)
Teaching and Learning Communication Skills in
Medicine: a review with quality grading of articles
Medical Teacher 21 (6)

Overwhelming evidence for positive effect of
communication training

Medical students, residents, junior doctors, senior
doctors

Specialists and general practice equally

Rutter and Maguire (1976) showed in a controlled
trial that medical students who underwent a training
programme in history-taking skills reported almost
three times as much relevant and accurate
information
Confirmed by Irwin and Bamber (1984) and Evans et
al (1989).

Evans et al (1991) showed that medical students
who learned key interviewing skills were
diagnostically more efficient in interviewing medical
and surgical patients and yet took no more time

Langewitz et al. (1998) demonstrated that specific patient-centred
communication skills can be taught to residents in internal medicine over a
6-month period.

Smith et al. (1998) showed that a one month intensive training course in
interviewing and related psycho-social topics for primary care residents
improved their knowledge about, attitudes toward and skills in interviewing,
with both real and simulated patients.

Humphris and Kaney (2001) demonstrated an improvement in
communication skills in medical students over 17 months of their
undergraduate teaching following a comprehensive and on-going
communication skills course.

Fallowfield et al. (2002) showed that senior clinicians working in cancer
medicine have many difficulties when communicating with patients, with
patients’ relatives and with professional colleagues. In a randomised
controlled trial of 160 oncologists from 34 UK cancer centres, an intensive 3day training course produced significant subjective and objective changes in
key communication skills three months later

Yedidia et al. (2003) evaluated the effects of a communications curriculum
instituted at 3 US medical schools. The curriculum significantly improved
third-year students' overall communications competence as well as their
skills in relationship building, organization and time management, patient
assessment, negotiation and shared decision making-tasks.

Stillman et al (1977) demonstrated that trained students maintained their
post-training superiority over their non-trained peers at follow up a year later

Maguire et al (1986) followed up their original students five years after
their training. They found that both groups had improved but those given
communication skills training had maintained their superiority in key skills
such as using open questions, clarification, picking up verbal cues and
coverage of psychosocial issues. These effects were found in interviews with
patients with both psychiatric and physical illnesses

Bowman FM et al (1992) showed that the improvement in interviewing
skills of established general practitioners following an interview training
course was maintained over a two year follow-up period

Oh et al (2001) showed that trained medicine residents use of patientcentred interviewing skills significantly improved after an intensive course
and these improvements were maintained for 2 years.
Which methods of learning work
Maguire et al 1978 randomised medical students into four training conditions and
discovered the following key steps:
•
the provision of detailed written guidelines of the areas to cover and the skills to use
•
the opportunity to practice interviewing under controlled conditions
•
observation by both self and facilitator
•
the provision of feedback by an experienced facilitator with the aid of audio or video
tape
Evans et al 1989 compared:
•
a series of 5 one hour lectures covering the background to communication training
and the verbal, non-verbal and listening skills that were helpful in the medical
interview. Students were given comprehensive hand-outs, including relevant theory
and research.
•
3 two hour workshops, after the lectures, using experiential methods such as role
play, discussion, videotaping with real and simulated patients and feedback
Premise 2
The need for experiential learning
• active small group or 1:1 learning
• observation of learners
• video or audio recording and review
• well-intentioned feedback
• rehearsal
UNIVERSITY OF
CAMBRIDGE
School of
Clinical Medicine
Plan
1.
Why does clinical communication often appear to be a
minority sport in medical education?
UNIVERSITY OF
CAMBRIDGE
School of
Clinical Medicine
1
Why clinical communication often appears to be a minority sport
Do real
clinicians
model this?
Is there a
planned
curriculum?
Have teachers been
trained?
UNIVERSITY OF
CAMBRIDGE
Does bedside
teaching back it
up?
When doesn’t
it occur?
Do the teachers
understand the
research?
Do learners
think it is an
add-on?
Who doesn’t teach
it?
Is it rigorously
assessed?
School of
Clinical Medicine
1
Why clinical communication often appears to be a minority sport
Do real
clinicians
model this?
Is there a
planned
curriculum?
Does bedside
teaching back it
up?
Do learners
think it is an
add-on?
Is clinical communication
Who doesn’t teach
integrated
into all clinical
When doesn’t
it?
it
occur?
challenges students learn?
Have teachers been
trained?
UNIVERSITY OF
CAMBRIDGE
Do the teachers
understand the
research?
Is it rigorously
assessed?
School of
Clinical Medicine
Summary point 1
Learners still often perceive
clinical communication teaching
as an optional extra,
not central to their learning
UNIVERSITY OF
CAMBRIDGE
School of
Clinical Medicine
Plan
1.
Why does clinical communication often appear to be a
minority sport in medical education?
2.
How to overcome this: integrate, don’t separate
UNIVERSITY OF
CAMBRIDGE
School of
Clinical Medicine
2
How to overcome this: integrate, don’t separate
What do we know about curriculum design?
Without training, medical students’ communication skills
deteriorate as the curriculum progresses (Helfer 1970)
Without reinforcement, learning from one-off courses
deteriorates over time (Engler et al 1981, Craig 1992)
Residents graduating from schools with more comprehensive
sustained communication courses have better interpersonal skills
(Kauss et al 1980)
At the very least, a curriculum with more sustained
communication training in yrs 1-3 led to less deterioration in yr 4
(Hook & Pfeiffer 2007)
Integrated longitudinal programmes achieve more effective
sustained increase in skills (van Dalen et al 2002)
UNIVERSITY OF
CAMBRIDGE
School of
Clinical Medicine
How to overcome this: integrate, don’t separate
2
So how does this research translate into
designing a communication curriculum?
•
A curriculum rather than a course
UNIVERSITY OF
CAMBRIDGE
School of
Clinical Medicine
2
How to overcome this: integrate, don’t separate
So how does this research translate into
designing a communication curriculum?
•
A curriculum rather than a course
•
A helical rather than linear curriculum review and reinforcement
UNIVERSITY OF
CAMBRIDGE
School of
Clinical Medicine
How to overcome this: integrate, don’t separate
2
So how does this research translate into
designing a communication curriculum?
•
A curriculum rather than a course
•
A helical rather than linear curriculum review and reinforcement
•
Integrated not separated from the rest of the
medical curriculum
UNIVERSITY OF
CAMBRIDGE
School of
Clinical Medicine
Summary point 2
If clinical communication is not
integrated throughout the curriculum,
it will always be perceived as an
inessential frill
UNIVERSITY OF
CAMBRIDGE
School of
Clinical Medicine
Plan
1.
So why does clinical communication often appear to
be a minority sport in medical education?
2.
How to overcome this: integrate, don’t separate
3.
Five specific areas of integration
UNIVERSITY OF
CAMBRIDGE
School of
Clinical Medicine
4
Five specific areas of integration
a. Integration with history taking skills
b. Integration with practical skills
c. Integration with specialty teaching
d. Integration with the hidden curriculum
e. The crucial role of assessment in integration
UNIVERSITY OF
CAMBRIDGE
School of
Clinical Medicine
3a integration with history taking skills

Communication skills teaching model
versus
Traditional medical history model
UNIVERSITY OF
CAMBRIDGE
School of
Clinical Medicine
3a Integration with history taking skills
Communication model (process)
• Initiating the session
• Gathering information
• Building relationship
• Structuring the interview
• Explanation and planning
• Closing the session
UNIVERSITY OF
CAMBRIDGE
School of
Clinical Medicine
3a Integration with history taking skills
Traditional Medical History Model (content)
• Chief complaint
• History of the present complaint
• Past medical history
• Family history
• Personal and social history
• Drug and allergy history
• Systematic enquiry
UNIVERSITY OF
CAMBRIDGE
School of
Clinical Medicine
3a Integration with history taking skills
Another confusion between process and
content
Communication skills teachers have introduced their
own new content
UNIVERSITY OF
CAMBRIDGE
School of
Clinical Medicine
content to be discovered in gathering information:
the bio-medical perspective
(disease)
sequence of events
symptom analysis
relevant systems review
background information - context
past medical history
drug and allergy history
family history
personal and social history
review of systems
content to be discovered in gathering information:
the patient’s perspective
(illness experience)
ideas and beliefs
concerns and feelings
expectations
effects on life
content to be discovered in gathering information:
the bio-medical perspective
(disease)
the patient’s perspective
(illness)
sequence of events
symptom analysis
relevant functional enquiry
ideas and beliefs
concerns
expectations
effects on life
feelings
background information - context
past medical history
drug and allergy history
family history
personal and social history
review of systems
3a Integration with history taking skills
So what’s the solution?
UNIVERSITY OF
CAMBRIDGE
School of
Clinical Medicine
3a Integration with history taking skills
Effective history taking
is essential to the practice of
high quality medicine
UNIVERSITY OF
CAMBRIDGE
School of
Clinical Medicine
3a Integration with history taking skills
Effective communication
is essential to the practice of
high quality medicine
UNIVERSITY OF
CAMBRIDGE
School of
Clinical Medicine
3a Integration with history taking skills
Effective clinical method
is essential to the practice of
high quality medicine
UNIVERSITY OF
CAMBRIDGE
School of
Clinical Medicine
3a Integration with history taking skills
THE CALGARY- CAMBRIDGE GUIDES
TO THE MEDICAL INTERVIEW
Kurtz, Silverman, Benson and Draper (2003)
Marrying Content and Process in Clinical Method Teaching: Enhancing
the Calgary-Cambridge Guides
Academic Medicine;78(8):802-809
UNIVERSITY OF
CAMBRIDGE
School of
Clinical Medicine
3
Five specific areas of integration
a. Integration with history taking skills
b. Integration with practical skills
UNIVERSITY OF
CAMBRIDGE
School of
Clinical Medicine
3b Integration with practical skills
Kneebone R, Kidd J, Nestel D, Asvall S,
Paraskeva P and Darzi A (2002)
An innovative model for teaching and learning
clinical procedures
Medical Education 36: 628-34
UNIVERSITY OF
CAMBRIDGE
School of
Clinical Medicine
UNIVERSITY OF
CAMBRIDGE
School of
Clinical Medicine
UNIVERSITY OF
CAMBRIDGE
School of
Clinical Medicine
Five specific areas of integration
a.
Integration with history taking skills
b.
Integration with practical skills
c.
Integration with specialty teaching
UNIVERSITY OF
CAMBRIDGE
School of
Clinical Medicine
3c Integration with specialty teaching
University of Cambridge
clinical rotations
UNIVERSITY OF
CAMBRIDGE
School of
Clinical Medicine
3c Integration with specialty teaching
Stage 2
Obstetrics and gynaecology
Paediatrics
Psychiatry
Major adult diseases/Infection-GU/oncology
Elderly, neurosciences, rheumatology and orthopaedics
UNIVERSITY OF
CAMBRIDGE
School of
Clinical Medicine
3c Integration with specialty teaching
Stage 2
Obstetrics and gynaecology
– Dealing with diversity
Paediatrics
– Interviewing children and parents
– Student selected difficulties
Psychiatry
– Psychiatric interviewing
• Assessing suicidal risk and depression following an overdose
• Interviewing the patient with delusions and hallucinations
Major adult diseases/Infection-GU/oncology
– The sexual history
– Practical clinical skills/communication course
Elderly, neurosciences, rheumatology and orthopaedics
– The explanation and planning course (three sessions)
UNIVERSITY OF
CAMBRIDGE
School of
Clinical Medicine
Five specific areas of integration
a.
Integration with history taking skills
b.
Integration with practical skills
c.
Integration with specialty teaching
d.
Integration with the hidden curriculum
UNIVERSITY OF
CAMBRIDGE
School of
Clinical Medicine
3c Integration with the hidden curriculum
• Formal communication skills teaching
• Informal communication skills teaching
• Modelling
UNIVERSITY OF
CAMBRIDGE
School of
Clinical Medicine
Five specific areas of integration
a.
Integration with history taking skills
b.
Integration with practical skills
c.
Integration with specialty teaching
d.
Integration with the hidden curriculum
e.
The crucial role of assessment in integration
UNIVERSITY OF
CAMBRIDGE
School of
Clinical Medicine
3e The crucial role of assessment in integration
Assessment essential for driving the
communication curriculum forward
Assessment acts a tool for integration
UNIVERSITY OF
CAMBRIDGE
School of
Clinical Medicine
3e The crucial role of assessment in integration
Simulated Clinical Encounter Examination
(SCEE)
UNIVERSITY OF
CAMBRIDGE
School of
Clinical Medicine
3e The crucial role of assessment in integration
Description of the SCEE
• OSCE-style examination
• 12 stations
– 4 stations of history taking and clinical reasoning
– 4 stations of explanation and planning
– 4 stations of other inter-personal skills
• Simulated patients and examiners
• 2 hours 40 mins face-to-face testing time
UNIVERSITY OF
CAMBRIDGE
School of
Clinical Medicine
3e The crucial role of assessment in integration
What does the SCEE test?
• Process skills of doctor-patient communication
• Integrated with content and clinical reasoning
• Tests clinical competence in the medical interview
UNIVERSITY OF
CAMBRIDGE
School of
Clinical Medicine
Summary point 3
Pay constant attention to the many
opportunities for integration throughout
the medical school curriculum
Involve all disciplines and all contexts
UNIVERSITY OF
CAMBRIDGE
School of
Clinical Medicine
Plan
1. So why does clinical communication often appear to
be a minority sport in medical education?
2.
How to overcome this: integrate, don’t separate
3.
Five specific areas of integration
4. A new UK consensus statement to help integrate
communication into the mainstream
UNIVERSITY OF
CAMBRIDGE
School of
Clinical Medicine
4
A new UK consensus statement
Martin von Fragstein, Jonathan Silverman, Annie
Cushing, Sally Quilligan, Helen Salisbury & Connie
Wiskin
on behalf of the UK Council for Clinical Communication Skills Teaching
in Undergraduate Medical Education
UK consensus statement on the content of
communication curricula in undergraduate
medical education
Medical Education 2008
http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/119879061/issue
UNIVERSITY OF
CAMBRIDGE
School of
Clinical Medicine
UNIVERSITY OF
CAMBRIDGE
School of
Clinical Medicine
Plan
1.
So why does clinical communication often appear to
be a minority sport in medical education?
2.
How to overcome this: integrate, don’t separate
3.
Five specific areas of integration
4. A new UK consensus statement to help integrate
communication into the mainstream
5.
The progression to maturity in communication
curricula
UNIVERSITY OF
CAMBRIDGE
School of
Clinical Medicine
The 20 year
approach:
Increasing maturity
Fully integrated
into assessment
Increasing number of
communication domains covered
Integrated helically and with clinical teaching
throughout curriculum
invest in faculty
development
involve faculty in
teaching and
assessment
involve senior
students and junior
doctors back into the
programme
Multiple stand-alone courses throughout all years
Multiple stand-alone courses in early years
Single stand-alone course in early years
The progression to maturity in communication curricula
Conclusion
Integrate
Collaborate
Persevere
UNIVERSITY OF
CAMBRIDGE
School of
Clinical Medicine